Driver ‘deliberately’ runs over five in France: minister

Forensic police inspect the site where a burnt car was found in Saint-Pierre-d’Oleron on Nov. 5, 2025, following an incident in which a car rammed into pedestrians and cyclists on the French Atlantic island of Oleron. (AFP)
Forensic police inspect the site where a burnt car was found in Saint-Pierre-d’Oleron on Nov. 5, 2025, following an incident in which a car rammed into pedestrians and cyclists on the French Atlantic island of Oleron. (AFP)
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Updated 05 November 2025
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Driver ‘deliberately’ runs over five in France: minister

Forensic police inspect the site where a burnt car was found in Saint-Pierre-d’Oleron on Nov. 5, 2025. (AFP)
  • The suspect was a 35-year-old fisherman from the island who lived alone, local officials and a prosecutor said

SAINT-PIERRE-D’OLERON, France: A driver with no previous record of radicalization on Wednesday “deliberately” mowed down five people on the French Atlantic island of Oleron, seriously injuring two of them, a minister said, in a lower toll than previously reported.
The suspect was a 35-year-old fisherman from the island who lived alone, local officials and a prosecutor said.
The man on Wednesday morning aimed his car at pedestrians and cyclists along a path on the scenic island off the western city of La Rochelle, Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said.
He ran over five people in 35 minutes, gravely wounding two, including a 22-year-old woman, he said.
The man was, however, “not known to intelligence services as having been radicalized,” he added, urging the public against jumping to conclusions, and saying there was no reason to involve any anti-terror prosecutors in the probe at this stage.
Prosecutor Arnaud Laraize said earlier that the suspect was an Oleron resident and initially reported that 10 people had been injured.
Laraize said the man — already known to the police for alleged involvement in petty crimes — cried “God is the greatest” in Arabic when arrested.
The expression is a key refrain in Islam, but also used by militants carrying out attacks.
Police used a taser to arrest the suspect as he set fire to his car, Nunez said.
The prosecutor said the man ran over people on a road between Dolus d’Oleron and Saint-Pierre d’Oleron.
The mayor of Saint-Pierre d’Oleron told local journalists the man lived in a mobile home in his town and was “someone who lived alone, had a very isolated life.”
A lawmaker from the anti-immigration National Rally (RN) party said the woman who was gravely wounded was his aide and had been out for a morning jog.
RN vice president Sebastien Chenu, leaping to conclusions about the nature of the attack, earlier in parliament warned of “the Islamist threat on our country.”
France has been rocked by a series of militant attacks in recent years.
In 2016, a Tunisian man plowed a 19-ton truck into crowds in the southern city of Nice, killing 86 people. The Daesh group claimed responsibility for the attack.
France will next week mark a decade since the attack on the Bataclan concert hall and other locations in Paris, which were also claimed by Daesh and killed 130 people.


Tuesday’s races were a quiet rebuke of Trump for many voters, AP Voter Poll finds

Tuesday’s races were a quiet rebuke of Trump for many voters, AP Voter Poll finds
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Tuesday’s races were a quiet rebuke of Trump for many voters, AP Voter Poll finds

Tuesday’s races were a quiet rebuke of Trump for many voters, AP Voter Poll finds
  • Most voters disapproved of Trump’s performance as president, and many thought his aggressive approach to immigration had “gone too far”

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump wasn’t on the ballot in Tuesday’s elections, but many voters in key races made their choice in opposition to him or considered him to be irrelevant, according to the AP Voter Poll.
It was hardly an endorsement of his nearly 10 months back in the White House.
That theme played out in the governor races in New Jersey and Virginia, the mayoral contest in New York City and a state proposition to redraw congressional districts in California.
The AP Voter Poll, which surveyed more than 17,000 voters in those places, found that most voters disapproved of Trump’s performance as president, and many thought his aggressive approach to immigration had “gone too far.” Republicans and those who lean toward the Republican Party were more likely to say Trump wasn’t a factor for their vote, even though most approve of his job performance.
Few cast a vote to support Trump, while more wanted to oppose him
Most presidents fare poorly in the off-cycle elections that come a year after their White House wins, and Trump fit solidly into that pattern as Democrats boasted victories in Tuesday’s key races.
In both Virginia and New Jersey, slightly fewer than half of voters said Trump was “not a factor” in their respective votes for governor. Beside some social media posts and tele-rallies Monday night, Trump did little to help Republican candidates in those states.

About 6 in 10 voters in New York City’s mayoral race said Trump did not play a role in their decision. That’s despite his threat to withdraw federal funding if Democratic nominee Zohran Mamdani won, and his social media endorsement of Andrew Cuomo, the former New York governor. New York City voters picked Mamdani to be their next mayor, setting up a possible showdown with the Trump administration.
For those who did identify Trump as a factor, it was to his disadvantage.
Roughly 4 in 10 voters in New Jersey and Virginia said they were casting ballots to oppose Trump. Fewer said they were voting to show their support for the Republican president.
Trump weighed more heavily in the minds of California voters, who were voting on a proposition to determine whether to redistrict the state’s congressional seats in favor of Democrats. The whole effort is designed to rebut Trump’s efforts to redraw congressional districts in Republican states with the specific goal of preserving the GOP House majority in next year’s midterm races.
Only about 4 in 10 California voters said Trump did not factor into their decision. But about half said they were voting to object to Trump. Roughly 1 in 10 California voters said they were voting with support for him.
Voters largely disapproved of Trump, and many cast ballots accordingly
Many voters disapprove of how Trump has performed since returning to the White House in January. That could be a problem for Republican candidates, as Trump has made loyalty to him a must for GOP candidates.
Only about 4 in 10 voters across Virginia and New Jersey approve of how the president is handling his job. Approval was even lower in the Democratic strongholds of California and New York City, where close to two-thirds of voters disapprove of his leadership so far.
Not surprisingly, the voters who were likeliest to disapprove of him were more likely to say they were signaling their dislike of him when casting a ballot. Meanwhile, voters who like Trump’s job performance were more likely to say the president wasn’t a factor in their choice.
Most Republican voters in Virginia and New Jersey approved of Trump’s performance as president, but that didn’t mean they saw him as a major motivator. About 6 in 10 Republicans in both states said Trump wasn’t a factor in their vote.
Many voters were unhappy with Trump’s immigration approach
In 2024, Trump capitalized on voters’ concerns about border crossings by immigrants without legal status.
This year, immigration fell far behind economic issues for voters when they were asked to think about what’s the most important issue facing their state or city. It wasn’t a top concern for voters in any of the four states where the AP Voter Poll was conducted. The survey also found that many voters were unhappy with Trump’s aggressive approach on deportations and arrests of immigrants believed to be in the country illegally.
Voters in California, New Jersey, New York City and Virginia were more likely to say that the Trump administration’s actions on immigration enforcement had “gone too far” than “been about right” or “not gone far enough.”
But voters in Virginia and New Jersey were about evenly split on whether their next governor should cooperate with the Trump administration on immigration enforcement.
Voters in New York City and California were more definitively opposed. About 6 in 10 voters in each place said their leaders should not be cooperating with the White House on immigration enforcement.